0 the grammatical name for the words "a" and "an" in English or words in other languages that have a similar use
1 the words "a" and "an" in English, or words in other languages that have a similar use.
If you ask for 'a ham sandwich', you're using the indefinite article 'a' before the noun.
Don't forget that, before any word beginning with a vowel, the indefinite article would be 'an', for example 'an interesting book'.
The reason for thinking this is that it cannot be determined by the indefinite article.
When vowel-initial nouns or noun modifiers followed the indefinite article, an occurred.
The latter were productions of a definite suffix instead of an indefinite article, a pronoun, an irrelevant comment, or a refusal to respond.
For the present analysis gender marked definite and indefinite article forms were used irrespective of case.
In the above sentence, for example, the rhematic nature of the subject is signaled by its indefinite article.
As hardly any dative forms of the indefinite article occurred, indefinite forms were not included in the analysis.
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不定冠詞…
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不定冠词…
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artículo indeterminado, artículo indefinido [masculine]…
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artigo indefinido…
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(文法)不定冠詞…
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belgisiz/belirtisiz harfi tarif…
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artcle [masculine] indéfini, article indéfini…
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article indefinit…
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